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Here we are with the Fifth Annual 48 Hour Book Challenge  that weekend extravaganza that lets you say, “Yeah, I’m reading that weekend.” Sign up in the comments today, and talk it up on your blog. Let’s do this thing!

The weekend is June 46, 2010. Read and blog for any 48-hour period within the Friday-to-Monday-morning window. Start no sooner than 7:00 a.m. on Friday the fourth and end no later than 7:00 a.m. Monday the seventh. So, go from 7:00 p.m. Friday to 7:00 p.m. on Sunday... or maybe 7:00 a.m. Saturday to 7:00 a.m. Monday works better for you. But the 48 hours do need to be in a row. That said, during that 48-hour period you may still have gaps of time in which you can’t read, and that’s fine. (In the middle of the three different challenge weekends I’ve had to go to work, attend a ballet recital, and drive for a Girl Scout event.)

The books should be about fifth-grade level and up. Adult books are fine, especially if adult book bloggers want to play. If you are generally a picture book blogger, consider this a good time to get caught up on all those wonderful books you’ve been hearing about. Graphic novels can be included in the reading. One audiobook can also be included in your time and book total.

The top three winners will be based only on time commitment, not number of books. So if you are heading into the 30+ hours club or 40+ hours club, track your time carefully. International winners may be given gift cards instead books due to mailing costs, unless a U.S. address is provided.

It’s your call as to how much you want to put into it. If you want to skip sleep and showers to do this  and some people do  go for it. If you want to be a bit more laid back, fine. But you have to put something into it or it’s not a challenge. Twelve hours is the benchmark for winning prizes.

The length of the reviews or notes written in your blog are not an issue. You can write a sentence, a paragraph, or a full-length review. Up to you. The time spent reviewing counts in your total time.

New last year: You can include some amount of time reading other participant’s blogs, commenting on participating blogs and Facebook pages, and Twittering about your progress (remember the #48hbc tag!). For every five hours, you can add one hour of networking. This time counts in your total time.

On your blog, state when you are starting the challenge with a specific entry on that day and leave the link to that post at the Starting Line post at MotherReader on June 4th (via the trusty Mr. Linky).

When you finish, write a final summary that clearly indicates hours  including partial hours  you spent reading/reviewing/networking, the number of books read, and any other comments you want to make on the experience. It needs to be posted no later than noon EST on Monday, June 7th. Also, check in at the Finish Line post on MotherReader that will be posted Sunday and please link to that post from your final summary post.

Last year we began to connect the 48HBC to charitable causes, and folks were able to connect their personal readathon to a Greater Good of their choice. While you may continue to select your own charity, I’m going to suggest supporting book and literacy projects through Donors Choose, a great resource that connects teachers in need of supplies to donors with funds to give. For myself, I plan to donate $1 per hour read to this DC school and welcome others  perhaps those not able to do the challenge this year  to sponsor me. Other participants can contribute to this cause and even this school as well, or to something else that moves you. Your readathon can be based on sponsors, comments, books read, or something else entirely. You can also choose not to participate in this aspect of the 48 Hour Book Challenge, though you may find a way to support others’ efforts by leaving comments (if that’s what is being tallied).

Oh, and I’m looking for donations for winners’ prize packages and other “door prizes” to be awarded to participants selected at random. Past prizes have included original sketches from Mo Willems and Matthew Holm, signed and sketched books from Adam Rex, loads of signed books, t-shirts from Threadless, artistic blank journals, jewelry, gift cards, notecards, and more. Good stuff. If you’d like to contribute to the prizes this year, shoot me an email at MotherReader AT gmail DOT com.

Sign up now in the comments and block of the dates on your calendar. Questions can also go in the comments, and I will respond in the comments and, if needed, with clarification in the final rules. Good luck, have fun, and happy reading!

98 comments:

WOW - what a cool event! I love the idea of tying it in to help a cause (like literacy!)MotherReader, you ROCK!Thanks for creating this for our community, I'll start getting word out on my networks...Namaste and a Hug,Lee

I'm in! Finally, a sport I can be competitive in--reading! and I'm planning on starting my own blog (in design and thinking phase right now), so this will be great for giving me a deadline to get my blog up before your challenge!

I am new to kidslitosphere and have not participated in your challenge previously. This is a neat idea! Curiouis as to where bloggers are putting their small kids while doing all this reading (LOL)!Debra

I'm not going to officially participate (I know I won't have that much time to read and I don't blog anymore) but I do have a list of YA books that I plan to read that week and I will be checking on how everyone is doing.

I have cleared my schedule and am ready to GO! My family knows that they are on their own this weekend, although I've learned to do some walking while reading so I don't get woozy from lack of physical activity!Thanks for setting this up.

AS FAR AS I KNOW, we are not graduating, moving, vacationing, visiting, major household renovating, major/minor surgery scheduling nor babysitting that weekend. Now having said that I am sure DISASTER will strike BUT for now, I PLAN to participate, FULLY, without distractions, interruptions, explosions or dislocations. I've just doomed myself, haven't I?

GONNA DO IT this time FINALLY. Nobody's getting potty trained, the house is not under construction, we're not going anywhere that weekend... I'm telling the family NOW to prepare to leave me alone while I sit under the willow tree and read. Thank you!

Alas, after having SO much fun last year and having thought of ways to involve the RIF staff even more this year, I cannot participate due to family and work related business hitting on these dates. BUT, I will be a cheerleader for sure, lurking throughout the three days when I can pull free to visit the various participants! I'll write you this weekend about some RIF prizes, too! I am trying hard to figure out how to serve warm chocolate chip cookies through the internet...sigh.........

Just to be clear (and I'm chiming in since MR is away for the weekend), the final completion time should be 7:00 am Monday the seventh, not the sixth. (You can pick any continuous 48 hour period from 7:00 a.m. on Friday through 7:00 a.m. Monday.)

Okay...count me in! I have been wanting to do one of these for the last few years. It will be my first time participating so a little nervous but excited at the same time! Looking forward to making a dent in my TBR pile!

I will be reading/blogging in support of the Little Lake Free School, a new democratic school opening in Ann Arbor this fall. They need all the help they can get, if anyone wants to join me in supporting them!!

It sounds great, I think I'll join in, but I have 2 questions: The time we write reviews, is that included in the reading time (while reading other people's blogs is networking time)?

Also, it's a real book-weekend for me as my book discussion group meets on Friday night, and a nearby bookshop hosts an interview with author David Mitchell on Sunday. Do my hours spend there count for something? :-)

The Rundown

One of the bestselling preschool books of recent times was Walter the Farting Dog. At the same time, the American Library Association named as one of its best books Michael Rosen’s Sad Book, a book in which Mr. Rosen talks about his despair over the death of his son. I believe that, for most of us, what we want lies somewhere between a flatulent canine and overwhelming grief.